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Ofgem ‘failed to act for almost a decade’ before energy crisis – Citizens Advice
9 December 2021, 00:04
The charity said mistakes and missed opportunities by the energy regulator left the market in a “precarious” position when gas prices surged in 2021.
Ofgem failed to act against unfit energy suppliers for almost a decade – leaving the market vulnerable to this year’s spike in wholesale prices, according to a damning report by Citizens Advice.
The charity said mistakes and missed opportunities by the energy regulator left the market in a “precarious” position when gas prices surged in 2021.
The rise in wholesale prices has led to the collapse of 26 suppliers, affecting four million customers and costing the average household around £94, latest figures suggest.
The charity alleges multiple instances in which Ofgem did not act on evidence of rule-breaking and scaled back enforcement activity even as concerns grew.
Ofgem’s enforcement powers went “unused” as supplier behaviour worsened, with the regulator opening just one formal investigation into customer service as it declined in the three years before the crisis, and failing to stop a single supplier taking on new customers in relation to customer service concerns since February 2019.
Regulatory “failings” led to a culture of non-compliance, with slow or missed action in response to evidence of licence breaches and on issues including accurate billing, access to phone lines for customers and offering prepayment options, the report said.
Citizens Advice said it raised repeated concerns about poor practice and financial viability as new suppliers entered the market from 2010 to 2019 and called for a formal review of the licensing regime as early as 2013.
However no review took place until 2018, with Ofgem only tightening the rules on new entrants in 2019 after 11 supplier failures.
The charity described poor practice as “rife”, with many companies showing clear evidence of financial unsustainability, including firms run out of the owners’ living rooms and kitchens.
Citizens Advice said there had long been evidence of financial weakness in the sector before this year’s crisis, with a number of suppliers reliant on customer credit balances for working capital.
Ofgem’s own analysis showed suppliers held a total of £1.4 billion in surplus credit in 2018.
Analysis suggested some consumer balances were “excessive”, with some customers reporting to Citizens Advice that their energy supplier was holding more than £1,000 of their money. According to Ofgem, an average bill payer needed only £150 in credit to cover typical winter usage.
The charity is calling for an independent review of the causes of the market collapse, including Ofgem’s approach to compliance and enforcement, and its reforms to ensure companies are fit to trade.
It also wants a new “consumer duty”, similar to that being introduced by the Financial Conduct Authority, making companies accountable for the outcomes their customers experience, and action by Government and Ofgem to protect consumers from unnecessarily steep increases to bills to pay for supplier failures.
Citizens Advice chief executive Dame Clare Moriarty said: “Energy customers are facing a multibillion-pound bill, in large part because Ofgem missed multiple opportunities to regulate the market and tackle rule-breaking by suppliers.
“Recent wholesale price rises would have been hard to handle in any circumstances, but they need not have led to the collapse of a third of companies in the market.
“It’s now clear that reform is needed – and this isn’t just about avoiding another crisis.
“If consumers lack confidence in the energy market, or feel they’re getting a bad deal, it will be even harder to transition to net zero. So reform is vital for the future as well as for avoiding the mistakes of the past.”
Ofgem said its safety net and price cap had protected millions of consumers amid “unprecedented” high global gas prices.
A spokesman said: “However, we accept that the energy market needs reform and quickly – the current system was not designed for this sort of extreme market event.
“Building on the approach we set out in October at Energy UK and our subsequent open letter to industry, in the next few weeks we will be announcing changes that will demonstrate the seriousness with which we are tackling the pace of change needed, the concerns around the financial resilience of the market, as well as ensuring that fair prices are reflected through the price cap.
“We welcome the opportunity to work alongside all consumer groups, including Citizen Advice, as well as the Government and the energy industry to make the changes needed as we all share the same objective to protect energy consumers now and in the future.”